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  1. The Jerome Mansion was a mansion on the corner of East 26th Street and Madison Avenue, across from Madison Square Park, in the modern NoMad neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It was the home of financier Leonard Jerome , one of the city's richest and most influential men in the middle- to late-19th century. [2]

  2. Leonard Jerome was born in 1817 on a farm in the Central New York town of Pompey, near Syracuse. He enrolled in Princeton University, then known as the College of New Jersey, as a member of the Class of 1839, before leaving for Union College, where he studied law and set up a practice in Rochester, New York. He later moved to New York City.

  3. 1 de may. de 2013 · Jennie Jerome died from a hemorrhage at the age of 67 on June 29, 1921. More than half century after her death, the family’s lavish Flatiron mansion was replaced by Forty-One Madison, the 42-story New York Merchandise Mart. Reflecting on his mother’s passing, Winston revealed, “I do not feel a sense of tragedy but only loss.

  4. 9 de dic. de 2015 · Leonard W. Jerome, 1817–1891 Leonard Jerome was born on 3 November 1817 in upstate New York. His flamboyant career on Wall Street combined the making and losing of fortunes with opulent spending. During the New York Draft Riots in July 1863, he defended the New York Times office building with a Gatling gun.

  5. Jeanette Jerome was born on January 9, 1854, in Brooklyn, New York. Her father Leonard Jerome was a self-made Wall Street millionaire and her mother Clara Hall Jerome was an attractive, fashion-conscious woman said to be one-quarter Iroquois Indian. Leonard dabbled in journalism, telegraphs, railroads, and horses.

  6. Leonard Walter Jerome, né le 3 novembre 1817 à Pompey et mort le 3 mars 1891 à Brighton, est un homme d'affaires américain. Biographie [ modifier | modifier le code ] D'une famille de huguenots français ayant émigré dans la colonie de New York en 1717, Leonard Jerome naît à Pompey , près de Syracuse .

  7. Leonard Jerome’s imprint on American thoroughbred racing in the 19 th century — specifically on the prominent and prestigious New York scene — was enormous. Known as the “King of Wall Street,” Jerome was a flamboyant stock speculator, financier, and patron of the arts who became a powerful figure in the thoroughbred game as the driving force behind the conception of three major ...